An isosceles triangle has two equal sides.
No, none of the sides of a scalene triangle are equal.
A triangle WITHOUT ANY EQUAL sides is a Scalene.
It can have a pair of equal sides.
All sides are equal on an equilateral triangle. All the sides are different lengths on a scalene. 2 sides are larger then the other 1 on a isosceles triangle.
The scalene triangle has no equal sides, and, therefore, no equal angles. (A triangle with no equal sides cannot have any equal angles and vice versa.)
isosceles triangle:a triangle having two sides of equal length
An isosceles triangle has two equal sides.
No, none of the sides of a scalene triangle are equal.
A triangle WITHOUT ANY EQUAL sides is a Scalene.
A question without any equal sides is a scalene triangle. A scalene triangle, by definition, is a triangle without any congruent sides. Of course, there are varying definitions, but they all have the same gist. Once again, a triangle without any equal sides is a scalene triangle!
It can have a pair of equal sides.
All sides are equal on an equilateral triangle. All the sides are different lengths on a scalene. 2 sides are larger then the other 1 on a isosceles triangle.
A triangle in which one angle is equal to 90o is called a right triangle. A triangle in which all sides are equal (or) all the angles are equal to 60o is called an equilateral triangle. A triangle in which any two sides or any two angles are equal is called an isosceles triangle. A triangle in which all the sides or angles are different is called a scalene triangle.
An isosceles triangle has three sides, two of which are exactly equal in length.
Using the traditional definitions, a triangle that has two equal sides (and angles) is an isosceles triangle and one with three equal sides (and angles) is an equilateral triangle. However, some mathematicians define an isosceles triangle as any triangle having at least two equal sides, which is what you are describing.
An isosceles triangle is any triangle with two sides of equal length.